Two workers at the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan were found to have been exposed to radioactive particles – just days after 10 workers were sprayed with radioactive water at the beginning of last week.

Two dust monitor alarms rang out in the main operations center in
the plant, where radiation levels are normally low enough not to
need to wear full face masks, the plant’s operator, Tokyo
Electric Power Company, said in an e-mailed statement.

The latest incident comes two and a half years after three of the
plant’s reactors suffered a meltdown in Japan’s worst-ever
nuclear power disaster.

Two workers who were at the end of their shift and were waiting
for a bus out of the site had their bodies wiped down, and full
body checks showed the staff members had received no internal
contamination.

Although TEPCO said it could not be sure that the sounding of the
alarms was definitely connected with the discovery that the
workers were contaminated, the incident is being investigated
further.

Last week 10 workers were also found to have been contaminated
with particles, which TEPCO suspected came from a mist sprayer
used to keep staff cool during the hot summer months.

The cooling devises were switched off and workers were also
banned from using tap water, which comes from the same source.

Also last Monday a separate alarm, which indicates high radiation
levels, went off at the continuous dust monitor installed in
front of the main building. As a result workers were instructed
to put on full face masks in areas of the site where they had
previously not been required to do so.

On August 11, Tepco said that a newly built observation well
contained highly toxic water. The well, which was drilled just
four meters from the sea on August 7, contained 34,000 becquerels
of radioactive tritium per liter.

There is also considerable concern that protective barriers
installed to prevent the flow of toxic water into the Pacific
Ocean are proving ineffective. Japan’s Health Ministry recently
estimated that 300 tons a day of contaminated ground water had
been seeping into the Pacific since the disaster in March 2011.

Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority has called the situation at
Fukushima a “state of emergency” and the government announced
earlier this month that it would be becoming more involved in the
clean-up work after TEPCO denied for months that radiation was
leaking into the Pacific.

Fuel rod fears

The most serious problem at Fukushima is the removal of the spent nuclear fuel rods,
inside the stricken reactor buildings.

The operation, which is planned to begin in November, will be
extremely dangerous and complicated because the structure of the
fuel pools where the rods are located has been severely
compromised. It is also not known to what extent the rods were
damaged when they caught fire immediately after the tsunami.

The rods were also corroded when engineers used salt water to
cool them, but it is unclear what state they are in. As
computer-guided removal is impossible, the job will have to be
done manually, Christina Consolo, a nuclear fallout researcher,
told RT.

“Leaving them in situ is not an option,” Consolo said. “As
long as the fuel rods are in their current locations, then they
pose an extreme risk as any rod at any time may go critical,
which means it will combust and release large amounts of
radiation.”

If an event such as a fire or another earthquake occurred, she
explained, the rods would be in extreme danger and some experts
say that the situation would be so serious that most of northern
Japan would be uninhabitable.

Their removal is a job fraught with danger for the workers
involved.

“My concern would be the physical and mental fitness of the
workers who will be in such close proximity to exposed fuel
during the extraction process,” said Consolo. “It will be hot and
uncomfortable, your senses shielded, and you will be filled with
anxiety. Even with the strongest protection possible workers will
have to be removed and replaced often.”

TEPCO admitted last month that as many as 10 percent of the
workers who have been involved in the cleanup may be at risk of
developing thyroid cancer. It also put the number of staff
irradiated at 11 times more than estimates it had previously
given to the World Health Organization. The total number of
workers who have been exposed to dangerous levels of radiation is
now being given as 1,978.